🇨🇳 eSIM for China

As low as £0.12/day*
Excellent ★★★★ Based on 2,400+ reviews
  • Unlimited data
  • 7-day validity
  • Fast and reliable internet
  • No more roaming charges
  • Instant QR code by email
Start enjoying unlimited data
Number of days
More days, lower the price!
7
Number of eSIMs
How many travelers?
1
Install your eSIM before or during your trip. Your plan will begin once you arrive at your destination and turn on your eSIM.

* As low as price reflects the cheapest per-day rate, based on the longest available unlimited data plan duration.

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China eSIM travel illustration

Fast and reliable data in China

  • Crystal-clear video calls across China, no delays
  • Share photos and stories from China in seconds
  • Navigate China confidently with live maps
  • Stream music and podcasts on the go
4G / 5G where available in China
WhatsApp WhatsApp
Instagram Instagram
Google Maps Google Maps
Spotify Spotify
Google Translate Google Translate
TikTok TikTok

Get your China eSIM in 3 easy steps

No store visit. No physical SIM. Works on any eSIM-compatible phone.

Choose a plan
1
Choose your plan

Select Unlimited or Data, pick how many days you need for China.

Install eSIM
2
Install your eSIM

Use the QR code sent to your email — takes under 2 minutes on any eSIM phone.

Connect on arrival
3
Connect on arrival

Turn on your eSIM when you land in China and enjoy instant connectivity.

Why choose uPhone for China?

No roaming charges
Pay a flat rate upfront — no surprise bills when you get home.
Keep your physical SIM
Your local number stays active. Use two networks at once.
Instant delivery by email
QR code arrives in your inbox seconds after purchase.
24/7 customer support
We're here around the clock via live chat and email.
Money-back guarantee
Changed your plans? Request a refund before your trip.
Easy installation
Scan the QR code in Settings — no app, no tech skills needed.

Why choose us?

See how uPhone compares with other options in China.

uPhone
Local SIM
Roaming
Unlimited data plans
Instant activation
Keep your existing number
No hidden fees
No contract
24/7 support
Asia eSIM

Travel the Region with Asia eSIM

Cover China and all nearby countries on one regional eSIM — no SIM swapping, no extra fees. Plans from £1.71.

View Asia Plans
Change of Plans illustration

Change of Plans? Don't worry.

Purchase your China eSIM with added peace of mind. If your trip changes or you haven't activated your eSIM yet, you have up to 30 days to request a full refund — no questions asked.

Internet restrictions illustration
High Restrictions

Internet Access in China

China's Great Firewall blocks most major foreign internet services including Google, YouTube, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, and Wikipedia. VPNs are restricted but widely used by travellers — install a trusted VPN before you arrive, as VPN app stores are also blocked inside China.

Broad Censorship Social Media Messaging Apps VoIP Calls Political Content News Sites VPN Restricted

Affected services: Google, YouTube, Gmail, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Telegram, Twitter/X, Wikipedia, most foreign news

Trusted by travelers

The most recommended China eSIM — see for yourself.

50,000+
Travelers who trust uPhone
★★★★★ Excellent · 4.8 / 5
🇨🇳

eSIM prices for China

All prices in GBP

Duration Price Per day
1 day £1.42 £1.42/day
7 days £1.50 £0.21/day
15 days £3.40 £0.23/day
30 days £3.48 £0.12/day
180 days £50.56 £0.28/day
China travel guide

Enjoy your China vacation

China is one of the world's most captivating destinations — a place where ancient dynasties and ultramodern skylines exist side by side. From the sweeping steps of the Great Wall at sunrise to the neon-lit river promenades of Chongqing, every corner of this vast country delivers something unexpected. Whether you're riding the bullet train between mega-cities, cruising the Li River past karst peaks in Guilin, or getting lost in a thousand-year-old hutong alleyway in Beijing, China rewards curious travellers with memories that last a lifetime. With a uPhone eSIM active in your phone, you'll stay connected and navigating with ease the moment you land — no roaming fees, no SIM swaps at the airport.

Top attractions in China

China is home to some of humanity's most extraordinary monuments. From ancient imperial palaces to surreal natural landscapes, each attraction tells a chapter of a civilisation spanning five thousand years. Here are the highlights no first-time visitor should miss.

  • The Great Wall of China — Hike the Mutianyu or Jinshanling sections for breathtaking views without the crowds.
  • The Forbidden City, Beijing — Nine thousand rooms of imperial grandeur at the heart of the capital. Arrive early to beat the tour groups.
  • The Bund & Pudong, Shanghai — The colonial waterfront on one side, the futuristic skyline of Pudong on the other. Best viewed at dusk when both sides light up.
  • Terracotta Army, Xi'an — Over 8,000 life-size clay soldiers guarding Emperor Qin Shi Huang's tomb. One of the greatest archaeological discoveries in history.
  • Zhangjiajie National Forest Park — The towering sandstone pillars that inspired the floating mountains in Avatar. Cable cars and glass-bottomed walkways for the adventurous.
  • Li River Cruise, Guilin — The slow boat from Guilin to Yangshuo drifts past jade-green karst peaks reflected in glassy water.

Popular foods to try in China

Chinese cuisine is not one cuisine — it is a mosaic of eight distinct regional traditions, each with its own bold flavours and cooking philosophy. From delicate Cantonese steaming to the fire of Sichuan mala spice, eating your way across China is a journey in itself.

  • Peking Duck (北京烤鸭) — Slow-roasted crispy duck served with paper-thin pancakes, spring onion and hoisin sauce. A Beijing institution.
  • Xiaolongbao (小笼包) — Shanghai's legendary soup dumplings, filled with pork and a rich gelatin broth that melts as they steam. Bite carefully.
  • Hot Pot (火锅) — A communal simmering broth at the table — toss in thinly sliced meat, tofu, mushrooms and leafy greens. Chongqing's numbing spicy version is unmissable.
  • Mapo Tofu (麻婆豆腐) — Silken tofu in a fiery Sichuan sauce of chilli bean paste, fermented black beans and Sichuan peppercorns.
  • Dan Dan Noodles (担担面) — Chewy wheat noodles tossed in a sesame-chilli sauce with preserved vegetables and minced pork.
  • Dim Sum — Head to Guangzhou or Hong Kong-style restaurants for an epic spread of har gow, siu mai, egg tarts and turnip cake.

Best time to visit China

Spring (April–May) and autumn (September–October) are the golden windows for visiting China. Temperatures are mild, skies are clearer, and the summer humidity has either not yet arrived or already retreated. Spring brings cherry blossoms to parks in Beijing and Shanghai; autumn paints the mountain forests at Zhangjiajie and Huangshan in vivid reds and golds.

Summer (June–August) is peak travel season for Chinese domestic tourists, meaning packed attractions and higher prices — plus intense heat and rainfall, especially in the south. If you do visit in summer, head to the cooler plateau regions of Yunnan or the Tibetan highlands.

Winter (December–February) is bitterly cold in the north but offers crowd-free access to major sights and dramatic snowy landscapes on the Great Wall. Southern China stays mild — Guangzhou and Hainan Island are warm year-round.

What to pack for your visit to China

Packing smartly for China means accounting for digital restrictions, payment barriers, and wildly varied climates all within the same country.

  • VPN-ready device — Many Western apps and websites (Google, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube) are blocked in mainland China. Install a reliable VPN before you depart.
  • Cash (Chinese Yuan/RMB) — Despite WeChat Pay and Alipay dominating payments, foreign visitors without a Chinese bank account may struggle to link cards. Carry some RMB.
  • Comfortable walking shoes — China's top sights involve substantial walking. The Great Wall alone requires sturdy, grippy footwear.
  • Layers for variable weather — Weather varies dramatically by region and season. Bring a packable down jacket for northern and highland areas, and a lightweight rain jacket for subtropical regions.
  • Power adapter (Type A/C) — China uses 220V with Type A, C and I outlets. A universal travel adapter covers you everywhere.
  • Your uPhone eSIM — Activate your eSIM data plan before landing. China's local networks offer excellent 4G/5G coverage nationwide, and your eSIM connects automatically on arrival.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about your China eSIM

An eSIM (embedded SIM) is a digital SIM built into your phone. Instead of inserting a physical card, you scan a QR code to activate a China data plan instantly. No physical SIM swap needed, no queuing at the airport.

Your QR code is delivered to your email immediately after purchase — typically within seconds. You can install it right away or save it for later, before you fly to China.

For most travelers to China, the Unlimited plan gives peace of mind — stream maps, video-call home, and share photos without worrying about data. For short trips, a 1–7 day data plan is great value.

Yes. Your phone uses the eSIM for data in China while your physical SIM stays active for calls and texts from home. Dual SIM, zero compromise.

Yes. Turn on your eSIM after landing and your data connection activates automatically. No configuration needed.

Hotspot availability depends on the specific plan. Unlimited plans typically include hotspot sharing. Check the plan details when purchasing.
24/7 Support

Need help? We're here for you.

Questions before or during your trip — our support team is always available via live chat and email. Typical response time under 2 minutes.

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